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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Annette Belcher-BM & Donald Turvill

NHS apologises as patient dies after six-hour wait for an ambulance

A family has received an apology after their loved one endured a six-hour wait for an ambulance before suffering a fatal heart attack.

NHS Lothian bosses issued the apology after initially denying any failings. But the region's health board was reprimanded after the patient's child took their complaint to a government watchdog.

An investigation by the Scottish Public Services Ombudsman (SPSO) found ‘unreasonable delays’ in administering antibiotics to the individual, referred to as ‘A’ in a report, who had an excruciating 360-minute wait. Alison MacDonald, nurse director at NHS Lothian, has now apologised to the patient’s family, Edinburgh Live has reported.

She added: “We accept the report from the Ombudsman and are working through the recommendations.” After being admitted to hospital for catheter blockage, the patient began to show signs of sepsis, a potentially life-threatening condition, the report said.

Further examination found that A needed urgent specialist treatment at a different facility in the region. However, it took “approximately six hours” for an ambulance to arrive.

“A suffered a heart attack during their admission and blood-thinning medication was prescribed. However, this made the bleeding at the catheter site increase.

'A' died in hospital several days later,” the Ombudsman added. The patient’s bereaved child complained to NHS Lothian chiefs over concerns about the care and treatment of their parent.

But the board said it “did not identify any failings”. However an appeal to SPSO, the final stage for complaints about public service organisations in Scotland, upheld aspects of the complaint.

A probe concluded the first hospital “had unreasonably delayed in treating A with antibiotic” which investigators said should have been done prior to being transferred to the second hospital. It also found the second hospital “had failed to recognise that A’s catheter was in the incorrect position within a reasonable timescale”.

The Ombudsman called for an apology to be made to the patient’s family and issued recommendations to avoid similar failings in future. It said: “Patients diagnosed with sepsis should have antibiotics administered promptly and without delay.

“Patients undergoing catheter insertion should be closely monitored so that any complications such as incorrect placement are recognised and treated without delay.” Alison MacDonald, Nurse Director, NHS Lothian, said: "I would like to publicly repeat our apology to the family of A for the failings in this case.

"We accept the report from the Ombudsman and are working through the recommendations.”

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